Abstract
The optical design and performance of the high-resolution powder diffraction beam line BM16 at ESRP are discussed and illustrated. Some recent studies carried out on BM16 are described, including crystal structure solution and refinement, anomalous scattering, in situ measurements, residual strain in engineering components, investigation of microstructure, and grazing-incidence diffraction from surface layers. The beam line is built on a bending magnet, and operates in the energy range from 5 keV to 40 keV. After the move to an undulator source in 2002, it will benefit from an extented energy range up to 60 keV and increased flux and resolution. It is anticipated that enhancements to the data quality will be achieved, leading to the solution of larger crystal structures, and improvements in the accuracy of refined structures. The systematic exploitation of anisotropic thermal expansion will help reduce the effects of peak overlap in the analysis of powder diffraction data.
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Fitch, A. N. (2004). The high resolution powder diffraction beam line at ESRF. In Journal of Research of the National Institute of Standards and Technology (Vol. 109, pp. 133–142). National Institute of Standards and Technology. https://doi.org/10.6028/jres.109.010
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